4.7 Article

Initial soil organic carbon concentration influences the short-term retention of crop-residue carbon in the fine fraction of a heavy clay soil

Journal

BIOLOGY AND FERTILITY OF SOILS
Volume 49, Issue 5, Pages 527-535

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s00374-013-0794-6

Keywords

C-13-N-15-labeled residues; Soil organic carbon; Soil particle-size fractions; Residue input rate; Laboratory incubation

Categories

Funding

  1. Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada
  2. Fond Quebecois pour la Recherche sur la Nature et les Technologies
  3. Max Bell Foundation at McGill University
  4. National Science and Engineering Research Council of Canada

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Among factors controlling decomposition and retention of residue C in soil, effect of initial soil organic C (SOC) concentration remains unclear. We evaluated, under controlled conditions, short-term retention of corn residue C and total soil CO2 production in C-rich topsoil and C-poor subsoil samples of heavy clay. Topsoil (0-20 cm deep, 31.3 g SOC kg(-1) soil) and subsoil (30-70 cm deep, 4.5 g SOC kg(-1) soil) were mixed separately with C-13-N-15-labeled corn (Zea mays L.) residue at rates of 0 to 40 g residue C kg(-1) soil and incubated for 51 days. We measured soil CO2-C production and the retention of residue C in the whole soil and the fine particle-size fraction (< 50 mu m). Cumulative C mineralization was always greater in topsoil than subsoil. Whole-soil residue C retention was similar in topsoil and subsoil at rates up to 20 g residue C kg(-1). There was more residue C retained in the fine fraction of topsoil than subsoil at low residue input levels (2.5 and 5 g residue C kg(-1)), but the trend was reversed with high residue inputs (20 and 40 g residue C kg(-1)). Initial SOC concentration affected residue C retention in the fine fraction but not in the whole soil. At low residue input levels, greater microbial activity in topsoil resulted in greater residue fragmentation and more residue C retained in the fine fraction, compared to the subsoil. At high residue input levels, less residue C accumulated in the fine fraction of topsoil than subsoil likely due to greater C saturation in the topsoil. We conclude that SOC-poor soils receiving high C inputs have greater potential to accumulate C in stable forms than SOC-rich soils.

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